132 resultados para Environment with multiple obstacles
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OBJECTIVES: Inhalation of bioaerosols has been hypothesised to cause "toxic pneumonitis" that should increase lung epithelial permeability at the bronchioloalveolar level. Serum Clara cell protein (CC16) and serum surfactant protein B (SPB) have been proposed as sensitive markers of lung epithelial injury. This study was aimed at looking for increased lung epithelial permeability by determining CC16 and SPB in workers exposed to bioaerosols from wastewater or garbage. METHODS: Subjects (778 wastewater, garbage and control workers; participation 61%) underwent a medical examination, lung function tests [American Thoracic Society (ATS) criteria], and determination of CC16 and SPB. Symptoms of endotoxin exposure and several potential confounders (age, gender, smoking, kidney function, obesity) were looked for. Results were examined with multiple linear or logistic regression. RESULTS: Exposure to bioaerosols increased CC16 concentration in the wastewater workers. No effect of exposure on SPB was found. No clue to work-related respiratory diseases was found. CONCLUSIONS: The increase in CC16 in serum supports the hypothesis that bioaerosols cause subclinical "toxic pneumonitis", even at low exposure. [Authors]
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Role of GLP-1 and GIP in beta cell compensatory responses to beta cell attack and insulin resistance were examined in C57BL/6 mice lacking functional receptors for GLP-1 and GIP. Mice were treated with multiple low dose streptozotocin or hydrocortisone. Islet parameters were assessed by immunohistochemistry and hormone measurements were determined by specific enzyme linked immunoassays. Wild-type streptozotocin controls exhibited severe diabetes, irregularly shaped islets with lymphocytic infiltration, decreased Ki67/TUNEL ratio with decreased beta cell and increased alpha cell areas. GLP-1 and GIP were co-expressed with glucagon and numbers of alpha cells mainly expressing GLP-1 were increased. In contrast, hydrocortisone treatment and induction of insulin resistance increased islet numbers and area, with enhanced beta cell replication, elevated mass of beta and alpha cells, together with co-expression of GLP-1 and GIP with glucagon in islets. The metabolic responses to streptozotocin in GLP-1RKO and GIPRKO mice were broadly similar to C57BL/6 controls, although decreases in islet numbers and size were more severe. In contrast, both groups of mice lacking functional incretin receptors displayed substantially impaired islet adaptations to insulin resistance induced by hydrocortisone, including marked curtailment of expansion of islet area, beta cell mass and islet number. Our observations cannot be explained by simple changes in circulating incretin concentrations, suggesting that intra-islet GLP-1 and GIP make a significant contribution to islet adaptation, particularly expansion of beta cell mass and compensatory islet compensation to hydrocortisone and insulin resistance.
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Vitellogenin genes are expressed specifically in the liver of female oviparous vertebrates under the strict control of estrogen. To explain this tissue-specific expression, we performed a detailed analysis of the Xenopus laevis vitellogenin gene B1 promoter by DNase I footprinting and gel mobility-shift assays. We characterized five binding sites for the ubiquitous factor CTF/NF-I. Two of these sites are close to the TATA-box, whereas the others are located on both sides of the estrogen responsive unit formed by two imperfect estrogen response elements. Moreover two liver-enriched factors, C/EBP and HNF3, were found to interact with multiple closely spaced proximal promoter elements in the first 100 base pairs upstream of the TATA-box. To confirm the physiological significance of this in vitro analysis, in vivo DNase I footprinting experiments were carried out using the ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction technique. The various cis-elements characterized in vitro as binding sites for known transcription factors and more particularly for liver-enriched transcription factors are efficiently recognized in vivo as well, suggesting that they play an important role in the control of the liver-specific vitellogenin gene B1 expression.
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Animals can often coordinate their actions to achieve mutually beneficial outcomes. However, this can result in a social dilemma when uncertainty about the behavior of partners creates multiple fitness peaks. Strategies that minimize risk ("risk dominant") instead of maximizing reward ("payoff dominant") are favored in economic models when individuals learn behaviors that increase their payoffs. Specifically, such strategies are shown to be "stochastically stable" (a refinement of evolutionary stability). Here, we extend the notion of stochastic stability to biological models of continuous phenotypes at a mutation-selection-drift balance. This allows us to make a unique prediction for long-term evolution in games with multiple equilibria. We show how genetic relatedness due to limited dispersal and scaled to account for local competition can crucially affect the stochastically-stable outcome of coordination games. We find that positive relatedness (weak local competition) increases the chance the payoff dominant strategy is stochastically stable, even when it is not risk dominant. Conversely, negative relatedness (strong local competition) increases the chance that strategies evolve that are neither payoff nor risk dominant. Extending our results to large multiplayer coordination games we find that negative relatedness can create competition so extreme that the game effectively changes to a hawk-dove game and a stochastically stable polymorphism between the alternative strategies evolves. These results demonstrate the usefulness of stochastic stability in characterizing long-term evolution of continuous phenotypes: the outcomes of multiplayer games can be reduced to the generic equilibria of two-player games and the effect of spatial structure can be analyzed readily.
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Purpose: To describe low mechanical index grey scale contrast enhanced breast ultrasound in patients with intraductal echogenic material in the differentiation of papillomas from intraductal secretions. Methods and materials: In five patients with echographically detected ductal dilatation containing echogenic material low mechanical index grey scale contrast enhanced ultrasonography was performed. No patient had nipple discharge. The examination was performed with a 9 MHz linear transducer after injection of 4 ml of Sonovue. It was assessed if contrast enhancement was present or not. The results were correlated with histologic results after surgical resection or percutaneous biopsy when performed. Results: In 3 patients contrast enhancement was observed. These patients were operated and the papillomas confirmed by histology. In two patients no contrast enhancement was observed. In one of these two patients percutaneous biopsy was performed without evidence of a papillary lesion. The second patient presented with multiple dilated ducts containing echogenic material. No biopsy was performed but breast MRI showed no intraductal enhancement supporting the non papillary nature of the intraductal material. Conclusion: This pilot study shows that contrast enhanced ultrasound is able to detect the vascularisation of papillomas and that it may differentiate intraductal papillomas from secretions.
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BACKGROUND: Desquamative interstitial pneumonia is a rare form of interstitial lung disease in children. Respiratory symptoms appear progressively, are often subtle, and diagnosis is often delayed by a mean of 6 months after onset. High resolution chest computed tomography is the most sensitive imaging technique for demonstrating and identifying interstitial pneumonia. The typical histologic pattern of desquamative interstitial pneumonia, with prominent clustered alveolar macrophages, diffuse reactive alveolar epithelial hyperplasia and globular proteinaceous material, is diagnostic. Desquamative interstitial pneumonia in children can be idiopathic, though it is mostly related to an inborn error of surfactant metabolism. CASE PRESENTATION: We present the complex clinical course and pathologic findings of a 30-months-old Mauritian and Senegalese girl with idiopathic desquamative interstitial pneumonia and multiple extrapulmonary manifestations. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of desquamative interstitial pneumonia to occur as part of a syndrome with multiple organ involvement. CONCLUSION: We believe that desquamative interstitial pneumonia is not always associated with mutations of the surfactant proteins, and can still be idiopathic, especially when occurring as part of a syndrome with multiple organ involvement, as described in other interstitial lung diseases.
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We propose and validate a multivariate classification algorithm for characterizing changes in human intracranial electroencephalographic data (iEEG) after learning motor sequences. The algorithm is based on a Hidden Markov Model (HMM) that captures spatio-temporal properties of the iEEG at the level of single trials. Continuous intracranial iEEG was acquired during two sessions (one before and one after a night of sleep) in two patients with depth electrodes implanted in several brain areas. They performed a visuomotor sequence (serial reaction time task, SRTT) using the fingers of their non-dominant hand. Our results show that the decoding algorithm correctly classified single iEEG trials from the trained sequence as belonging to either the initial training phase (day 1, before sleep) or a later consolidated phase (day 2, after sleep), whereas it failed to do so for trials belonging to a control condition (pseudo-random sequence). Accurate single-trial classification was achieved by taking advantage of the distributed pattern of neural activity. However, across all the contacts the hippocampus contributed most significantly to the classification accuracy for both patients, and one fronto-striatal contact for one patient. Together, these human intracranial findings demonstrate that a multivariate decoding approach can detect learning-related changes at the level of single-trial iEEG. Because it allows an unbiased identification of brain sites contributing to a behavioral effect (or experimental condition) at the level of single subject, this approach could be usefully applied to assess the neural correlates of other complex cognitive functions in patients implanted with multiple electrodes.
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Glypicans are a family of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored, membrane-bound heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans. Their biological roles are only partly understood, although it is assumed that they modulate the activity of HS-binding growth factors. The involvement of glypicans in developmental morphogenesis and growth regulation has been highlighted by Drosophila mutants and by a human overgrowth syndrome with multiple malformations caused by glypican 3 mutations (Simpson-Golabi-Behmel syndrome). We now report that autosomal-recessive omodysplasia, a genetic condition characterized by short-limbed short stature, craniofacial dysmorphism, and variable developmental delay, maps to chromosome 13 (13q31.1-q32.2) and is caused by point mutations or by larger genomic rearrangements in glypican 6 (GPC6). All mutations cause truncation of the GPC6 protein and abolish both the HS-binding site and the GPI-bearing membrane-associated domain, and thus loss of function is predicted. Expression studies in microdissected mouse growth plate revealed expression of Gpc6 in proliferative chondrocytes. Thus, GPC6 seems to have a previously unsuspected role in endochondral ossification and skeletal growth, and its functional abrogation results in a short-limb phenotype.
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Initiation and progression of most colorectal cancers (CRCs) are driven by hyper-activation of the canonical Wnt/ß-catenin/TCF signaling pathway. However, a basal level of activation of this pathway is necessary for intestinal cell homeostasis; thus only CRC-specific effectors of this pathway could be exploited as potential clinical targets. PROX1 is an evolutionary conserved transcription factor with multiple roles in several tissues in embryogenesis, and increasing relevance in cancer. PROX1 is a colon cancer-specific Wnt target in the intestine, thus it might represent a therapeutic target. The role of PROX1 in promoting the transition from early to highly-dysplastic adenoma was previously described [1], Importantly, tumor metastasis is a leading cause of cancer-related mortality. Frequently, micrometastases are already present in patients at the time of diagnosis, therefore better understanding of the mechanisms regulating growth of macrometastatic lesions is important for the development of novel treatment approaches. In this study we showed that PROX1 is expressed in colon cancer stem cell and promotes the outgrowth of metastatic lesions. Firstly, we analyzed the expression of PROX1 in advanced CRCs and their metastases. We found that PROX1 over-expression is a feature of microsatellite stable tumors (~85% of microsatellite stable (MSS) CRCs), which generally have worse prognosis in comparison to microsatellite unstable CRCs. Analysis of primary CRCs and corresponding metastatic lesions showed that PROX1 expression is conserved, or increased in metastases. Further bioinformatics analysis of tumor and metastases gene expression profiles showed that PROX1 is co- expressed with stem cell and progenitor markers. Moreover, in inducible ApcmLgr5-EGFP-lres-CreERT2 model, Prox1+ cells marked a sub-population of Lgr5+ stem cells and subsequent transient amplifying cell population. Orthotopic model of CRC and lung colonization assays in mice demonstrated that PROX1 promotes tumor cell outgrowth in metastatic lesions, while it has no effect on primary tumor growth, invasion, and survival in circulation or cell extravasation. In vitro, PROX1 expressing tumor cells demonstrated strongly increased capacity to form spheroids, and increased survival and proliferation under hypoxic or nutrient-deprivation conditions. By monitoring cellular respiration under these conditions, we found that PROX1 expressing cells exhibit a better metabolic adaptation to changes in fuel source. Autophagy inhibitors, prevented growth both in vitro and in vivo of PROX1 expressing cells. Importantly, conditional inactivation of PROX1 after the establishment of metastases prevented further growth of macroscopic lesions resulting in stable disease. In summary, we identified a novel mechanism underlying the ability of metastatic colon cancer stem and progenitor cells to survive and grow in target organs through metabolic adaptation. Our results establish PROX1 as a key factor of CRC metastatic disease where it promotes survival of metastatic colon cancer stem-like cells, through their metabolic adaptation in sub-optimal microenvironments - L'initiation et la progression de la plupart des cancers colorectaux (CRC) sont entraînées par une hyper-activation de la voie métabolique Wnt/ß- caténine/TCF. Toutefois, un niveau d'activation minimal de Wnt est nécessaire pour l'homéostasie des cellules intestinales ; ainsi seuls des effecteurs spécifiques du CRC- de cette voie pourraient être exploités comme des cibles cliniques potentielles. PROX1 est un facteur de transcription évolutif conservé avec de multiples rôles dans plusieurs tissus durant l'embryogenèse et une pertinence croissante dans le cancer. PROX1 est une cible Wnt spécifique dans le cancer de l'intestin, donc il pourrait représenter une cible thérapeutique. Le rôle de PROX1 durant l'évolution de la maladie d'un stade précoce jusqu'à l'adénome hautement dysplasique a été décrit précédemment. Surtout, la métastase des tumeurs est une cause majeure de mortalité liée au cancer. Souvent, les micro-métastases sont déjà présentes chez les patients au moment du diagnostic, c'est pourquoi une meilleure compréhension des mécanismes régulant la croissance des lésions macrométastatiques est importante pour le développement de nouvelles approches thérapeutiques. Dans cette étude, nous avons prouvé que PROX1 est exprimé dans les cellules souches du cancer du côlon et favorise l'apparition de lésions métastatiques. Nous avons d'abord analysé l'expression de PROX1 dans des CRC avancés ainsi que dans leurs métastases. Nous avons constaté que la surexpression de PROX1 est une caractéristique des tumeurs stables microsatellites (~85% du MSS CRC), qui ont généralement un pronostic défavorable par rapport aux microsatellites CRC instables. L'analyse des CRC primaires et de leurs métastases liées a montré que l'expression de PROX1 est conservée, voire augmentée dans les métastases. A l'aide d'une base de données de tumeurs et métastases, nous avons observé une co- régulation de PROX1 entre cellules souches et marqueurs de progéniteurs mais pas avec des cellules différenciées. De plus, en utilisant un modèle Apcm Lgr5-EGFP-IRES-CreERT2 inductible, les cellules Prox1+ ont marqué une sous-population de cellules LGR& capable de produire une lignée. Un modèle orthotopique de cancer colorectal et des essais de colonisation du poumon chez la souris ont démontré que PROX1 favorise l'excroissance des cellules tumorales dans les lésions métastatiques, alors qu'il n'a aucun effet sur la croissance tumorale primaire, l'invasion ou une extravasation des cellules. In vitro, les cellules tumorales exprimant PROX1 ont démontré une forte augmentation de leur capacité à former des sphéroïdes, ainsi qu'une augmentation de la survie et de la prolifération dans des conditions hypoxiques ou lors de privation de nutriments. En contrôlant la respiration cellulaire dans ces conditions, nous avons constaté que les cellules exprimant PROX1 présentent une meilleure adaptation métabolique à l'évolution des sources de carburant. Des inhibiteurs de l'autophagie, suggérant une approche thérapeutique potentielle, ont tué à la fois in vitro et in vivo les cellules exprimant PROX1. Surtout, l'inactivation conditionnelle de PROX1 après l'apparition de métastases a empêché la croissance des lésions macroscopiques résultant en une maladie stable. En résumé, nous avons identifié un nouveau mécanisme mettant en évidence la capacité des cellules souches du cancer du côlon métastatique à survivre et à se développer dans les organes cibles grâce à l'adaptation métabolique. Nos résultats définissent PROX1 comme un facteur clé du cancer colorectal métastatique en favorisant la survie des cellules souches métastatiques apparentées au cancer du colon grâce à leur adaptation métabolique aux microenvironnements défavorables.
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OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was the qualitative and quantitative assessment of the in vitro effect of HIV-1 protease (PR) mutation 82M on replication capacity and susceptibility to the eight clinically available PR inhibitors (PIs).¦METHODS: The 82M substitution was introduced by site-directed mutagenesis in wild-type subtype B and G strains, as well as reverted back to wild-type in a therapy-failing strain. The recombinant viruses were evaluated for their replication capacity and susceptibility to PIs.¦RESULTS: The single 82M mutation within a wild-type subtype B or G background did not result in drug resistance. However, the in vitro effect of single PR mutations on PI susceptibility is not always distinguishable from wild-type virus, and particular background mutations and polymorphisms are required to detect significant differences in the drug susceptibility profile. Consequently, reverting the 82M mutation back to wild-type (82I) in a subtype G isolate from a patient that failed therapy with multiple other PR mutations did result in significant increases in susceptibility towards indinavir and lopinavir and minor increases in susceptibility towards amprenavir and atazanavir. The presence of the 82M mutation also slightly decreased viral replication, whether it was in the genetic background of subtype B or subtype G.¦CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that 82M has an impact on PI susceptibility and that this effect is not due to a compensatory effect on the replication capacity. Because 82M is not observed as a polymorphism in any subtype, these observations support the inclusion of 82M in drug resistance interpretation systems and PI mutation lists.
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Hepatic glucose production is autoregulated during infusion of gluconeogenic precursors. In hyperglycemic patients with multiple trauma, hepatic glucose production and gluconeogenesis are increased, suggesting that autoregulation of hepatic glucose production may be defective. To better understand the mechanisms of autoregulation and its possible alterations in metabolic stress, lactate was coinfused with glucose in healthy volunteers and in hyperglycemic patients with multiple trauma or critical illness. In healthy volunteers, infusion of glucose alone nearly abolished endogenous glucose production. Lactate increased gluconeogenesis (as indicated by a decrease in net carbohydrate oxidation with no change in total [13C]carbohydrate oxidation) but did not increase endogenous glucose production. In patients with metabolic stress, endogenous glucose production was not suppressed by exogenous glucose, but lactate did not further increase hepatic glucose production. It is concluded that 1) in healthy humans, autoregulation of hepatic glucose production during infusion of lactate is still present when glycogenolysis is suppressed by exogenous glucose and 2) autoregulation of hepatic glucose production is not abolished in hyperglycemic patients with metabolic stress.
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We report a case series of 11 patients with severe E. faecium infections treated with daptomycin. All strains were resistant to ampicillin (MIC >8 mg/l), but susceptible to vancomycin. Seven out of 11 strains were also highly resistant to gentamicin (MIC >500 mg/l). All patients were treated with multiple broad-spectrum antibiotics prior to isolation of E. faecium and had severe underlying diseases. Our experience suggests that salvage therapy with daptomycin might be a safe and efficacious treatment for E. faecium infections.
North-African house martins endure greater haemosporidian infection than their European counterparts
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Afro-Palearctic migrant species are exposed to parasites at both breeding and over-wintering grounds. The house martin Delichon urbicum is one such migratory species facing high instances of blood parasite infection. In an attempt to determine whether breeding European house martins harbour similar blood parasite communities to populations breeding in North Africa, birds were sampled at their breeding grounds in Switzerland and Algeria. Moreover, haemosporidian prevalence and parasite communities were compared to published data sets on Spanish and Dutch breeding populations. This study furthermore wanted to establish whether co-infection with multiple genera or lineages of parasites had negative effects on host body condition. Breeding house martins caught in Algeria showed a higher prevalence of avian haemosporidian parasites than did European populations. Swiss house martins showed a prevalence comparable to that of Spanish and Dutch populations. There were slight differences in the haemosporidian community between European and North-African populations in terms of composition and abundance of each lineage. Similar to the Dutch house martins, but in contrast to the Spanish population, infection status and number of genera of parasites infecting single hosts did not inFLuence Swiss house martin body condition.
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BACKGROUND: Replicative phenotypic HIV resistance testing (rPRT) uses recombinant infectious virus to measure viral replication in the presence of antiretroviral drugs. Due to its high sensitivity of detection of viral minorities and its dissecting power for complex viral resistance patterns and mixed virus populations rPRT might help to improve HIV resistance diagnostics, particularly for patients with multiple drug failures. The aim was to investigate whether the addition of rPRT to genotypic resistance testing (GRT) compared to GRT alone is beneficial for obtaining a virological response in heavily pre-treated HIV-infected patients. METHODS: Patients with resistance tests between 2002 and 2006 were followed within the Swiss HIV Cohort Study (SHCS). We assessed patients' virological success after their antiretroviral therapy was switched following resistance testing. Multilevel logistic regression models with SHCS centre as a random effect were used to investigate the association between the type of resistance test and virological response (HIV-1 RNA <50 copies/mL or ≥1.5 log reduction). RESULTS: Of 1158 individuals with resistance tests 221 with GRT+rPRT and 937 with GRT were eligible for analysis. Overall virological response rates were 85.1% for GRT+rPRT and 81.4% for GRT. In the subgroup of patients with >2 previous failures, the odds ratio (OR) for virological response of GRT+rPRT compared to GRT was 1.45 (95% CI 1.00-2.09). Multivariate analyses indicate a significant improvement with GRT+rPRT compared to GRT alone (OR 1.68, 95% CI 1.31-2.15). CONCLUSIONS: In heavily pre-treated patients rPRT-based resistance information adds benefit, contributing to a higher rate of treatment success.
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RESUME Introduction: Les cellules T mémoires humaines sont classées en trois sous-populations sur la base de l'expression d'un marqueur de surface cellulaire, CD45RA, et du récepteur aux chimiokines, CCR7. Ces sous-populations, nommées cellules mémoires centrales (TcM), mémoires effectrices (TEM) et mémoires effectrices terminales (ITEM), ont des rôles fonctionnels distincts, ainsi que des capacités de prolifération et de régénération différentes. Cependant, la génération de ces différences reste encore mal comprise et on ignore les mécanismes moléculaires impliqués. Matériaux et Méthodes: Des cellules mononucléaires humaines du sang périphérique ont été séparées par cytométrie de flux selon leur expression de CD4, CD8, CD45RA et CCR7 en sous-populations de cellules CD4+ ou CD8+ naïves, TcM, TEM ou ITEM. Dans chacune de ces sous-populations, 14 gènes impliqués dans l'apoptose, la survie ou la capacité proliférative des cellules T ont été quantifiés par RT-PCR en temps réel, relativement à l'expression d'un gène de référence endogène. L'ARN provenant de 450 cellules T a été utilisé par gène et par sous-population. Les gènes analysés (cibles) comprenaient des gènes de survie (BAFF, APRIL, BAFF-R, BCMA, TACI, IL-15Rα, IL-7Rα), des gènes anti-apoptotiques (Bcl-2, BclxL, FLIP), des gènes pro-apoptotiques (Bad, Bax, Fast) et le gène anti-prolifératif, Tob. A l'aide de la méthode comparative delta-delta-CT, le taux d'expression des gènes cibles de chaque sous-population des cellules T mémoires CD4+ et CD8+, à été comparée à leur taux d'expression dans les cellules T naïves CD4+ et CD8+. Résultats: Dans les cellules CD8+, les gènes pro-apoptotiques Bax et Fast étaient surexprimés dans toutes les sous-populations mémoires, tandis que l'expression des facteurs anti-apoptotiques et de survie comme Bcl-2, APRIL et BAFF-R, étaient diminués. Ces deux tendances étaient particulièrement accentuées dans les sous-groupes des cellules mémoires TEM et TTEM. A noter que malgré le fait que leur expression était également diminuée dans les autres cellules mémoires, le facteur de survie IL-7Ra, était sélectivement surexprimé dans la sous-population de cellules TcM et l'expression d'IL-15Ra était sélectivement augmentée dans les TEM. Dans les cellules CD4+, le taux d'expression des gènes analysés était plus variable entre les sujets étudiés que dans les cellules CD8+, ne permettant pas de définir un profil d'expression spécifique. L'expression du gène de survie BAFF par contre, a été significativement augmentée dans toutes les sous-populations mémoire CD4+. Il en va de même pour l'expression d' APRIL et de BAFF-R, bien que dans moindre degré. A remarquer que l'expression du facteur anti-apoptotique Fast a été observée uniquement dans la souspopulation des TTEM. Discussion et Conclusions: Cette étude montre une nette différence entre les cellules CD8+ et CD4+, en ce qui concerne les profils d'expression des gènes impliqués dans la survie et l'apoptose des cellules T mémoires. Ceci pourrait impliquer une régulation cellulaire homéostatique distincte dans ces deux compartiments de cellules T mémoires. Dans les cellules CD8+ l'expression d'un nombre de gènes impliqués dans la survie et la protection de l'apoptose semblerait être diminuée dans les populations TEM et TTEM en comparaison à celle des sous-populations naïves et TEM, tandis que l'expression des gènes pro-apoptotiques semblerait être augmentée. Comme ceci paraît être plus accentué dans les TTEM, cela pourrait indiquer une plus grande disposition à l'apopotose dans les populations CCR7- (effectrices) et une perte de survie parallèlement à l'acquisition de capacités effectrices. Ceci parlerait en faveur d'un modèle de différentiation linéaire dans les cellules CD8+. De plus, l'augmentation sélective de l'expression d'IL-7Ra observée dans le sous-groupe de cellules mémoires TEM, et d'IL-15Ra dans celui des TEM, pourrait indiquer un moyen de sélection pour des réponses immunitaires mémoires à long terme par une réponse distincte à ces cytokines. Dans les cellules CD4+ par contre, aucun profil d'expression n'a pu être déterminé; les résultats suggèrent même une résistance relative à l'apoptose de la part des cellules mémoires. Ceci pourrait favoriser l'existence d'un modèle de différentiation plus flexible avec des possibilités d'interaction multiples. Ainsi, la surexpression sélective de BAFF, APRIL et BAFF-R dans les sous-populations individuelles des cellules mémoires pourrait être un indice de l'interaction de ces sous-groupes avec des cellules B. ABSTRACT Introduction: Based on their surface expression of the CD45 isoform and of the CCR7 chemokine receptor, memory T cells have been divided into the following three subsets: central memory (TAM), effector memory (TEM) and terminal effector memory (ITEM). Distinct functional roles and different proliferative and regenerative capacities have been attributed to each one of these subpopulations. The molecular mechanisms underlying these differences; however, remain poorly understood. Materials and Methods: According to their expression of CD4, CD8, CD45RA and CCR7, human peripheral blood mononuclear cells were sorted by flow-cytometry into CD4+ or CD8+ naïve, TAM, TEM and ITEM subsets. Using real-time PCR, the expression of 14 genes known to be involved in apoptotis, survival or proliferation of T cells was quantified separately in each individual subset, relative to an endogenous reference gene. The RNA equivalent of 450 T cells was used for each gene and subset. The target gene panel included the survival genes BAFF, APRIL, BAFF-R, BCMA, TACI, IL-15Rα and IL-7Rα, the anti-apoptotic genes Bcl2, Bcl-xL and FLIP, the pro-apoptotic genes Bad, Bax and Fast, as well as the antiproliferative gene Tob. Using the comparative CT-method, the expression of the target genes in the three memory T cell subsets of both CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations was compared to their expression in the naïve T cells. Results: In CD8+ cells, the pro-apoptotic factors Bax and Fast were found to be upregulated in all memory T cell subsets, whereas the survival and anti-apoptotic factors Bcl-2, APRIL and BAFF-R were downregulated. These tendencies were most accentuated in TEM and TTEM subsets. Even though the survival factor IL-7Rα was also downregulated in these subsets, interestingly, it was selectively upregulated in the CD8+ TAM subset. Similarly, IL-15Rαexpression was shown to be selectively upregulated in the CD8+ TEM subset. In CD4+ cells, the expression levels of the analyzed genes showed a greater inter-individual variability than in CD8+ cells, thus suggesting the absence of any particular expression pattern for CD4+ memory T cells. However, the survival factor BAFF was found to be significantly upregulated in all CD4+ memory T cell subsets, as was also the expression of APRIL and BAFF-R, although to a lesser extent. Furthermore, it was noted that the pro-apoptotic gene Fast was only expressed in the TTEM CD4+ subset. Discussion and Conclusions: Genes involved in apoptosis and survival in human memory T cells have been shown to be expressed differently in CD8+ cells as compared to CD4+ cells, suggesting a distinct regulation of cell homeostasis in these two memory T cell compartments. The present study suggests that, in CD8+ T cells, the expression of various survival and antiapoptotic genes is downregulated in TEM and TTEM subsets, while the expression of proapoptotic genes is upregulated in comparison to the naïve and the TAM populations. These characteristics, potentially translating to a greater susceptibility to apoptosis in the CCR7- (effector) memory populations, are accentuated in the TTEM population, suggesting a loss of survival in parallel to the acquisition of effector capacities. This speaks in favour of a linear differentiation model in CD8+ T memory cells. Moreover, the observed selectively increased expression of IL-7Rα in CD8+ TAM cells - as that of IL-15Rα in CD8+ TEM cells -suggest that differential responsiveness to cytokines could confer a selection bias for distinct long-term memory cell responses. Relative to the results for CD8+ T cells, those for CD4+ T cells seem to indicate a certain resistance of the memory subsets to apoptosis, suggesting the possibility of a more flexible differentiation model with multiple checkpoints and potential interaction of CD4+ memory cells with other cells. Thus, the selective upregulation of BAFF, APRIL and BAFF-R in individual memory subsets could imply an interaction of these subsets with B cells.